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Multidisciplinary analyses and ancient DNA reveal social inequality and mobility in the Central Plains during the Eastern Zhou period in China

Baoshuai Zhang, Jiajing Zheng, Lei Sun et al.

23 Authors
2025-12-30 Published
284 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

BZ
Baoshuai Zhang
JZ
Jiajing Zheng
LS
Lei Sun
YZ
Yuanyuan Zhang
ZG
Zhenlong Gao
ZH
Zhaohui Han
PS
Pengfei Sheng
XZ
Xingxiang Zhang
JW
Juan Wang
PD
Panxin Du
JX
Jianxue Xiong
XC
Xin Chang
KW
Ke Wang
BW
Bangyan Wang
KZ
Kongyang Zhu
RW
Rui Wang
XY
Xiaomin Yang
TB
Tianyou Bai
YX
Yu Xu
GW
Gao Wu
CW
Chuan-Chao Wang
SW
Shaoqing Wen
AF
Anchuan Fan
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Eastern Zhou period (771–221 BC), characterized by social stratification, was marked by important inequality. Here the authors analyse 32 skeletons from Songzhuang Cemetery in Henan Province using sex-specific peptides, ancient DNA and isotopes to explore multidimensional inequality in sexes, diet and mobility. DNA and proteomic analyses show that young women were marginalized as sacrificial victims (22 out of 26 human sacrifices were female). Carbon and nitrogen isotopic analyses suggest dietary differences by social class, with the nobility consuming more high-protein and millet-based diets than sacrificial companions, who themselves show intra-group dietary variation (δ13Cbone,nobles = −8.6‰; δ13Cbone,human sacrifice group one = −10.9‰; δ13Cbone,human sacrifice group two = −14.1‰; δ15Nbone,nobles = 11.6‰; δ15Nbone,human sacrifice group one = 8.5‰; δ15Nbone,human sacrifice group two = 7.7‰). Enamel and dentin isotope data indicate that these dietary inequalities were established from childhood (δ13Cenamel,nobles = −1.5‰; δ13Cenamel,human sacrifice group one = −3.8‰; δ13Cenamel,human sacrifice group two = −6.9‰). Strontium and oxygen isotope evidence shows that a high proportion of the nobles were non-local migrants. Genetic analysis reveals a genealogy linking four noblewomen to a sacrificial victim, highlighting the importance of kinship and marital alliances in maintaining social status. Despite class rigidity, dental isotope sequences in M18 reveal that two individuals experienced childhood dietary shifts, indicating rare class mobility.

Chapter III

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